Open Europe Hedge Fund Survey Findings

New York (HedgeCo.net) – Based on two surveys of private equity managers and hedge fund managers, carried out during August 2009, Open Europe has published the most comprehensive study to date of the likely impact of the EU’s proposed Alternative Investment Fund Managers (AIFM) Directive. Among the findings is that the hedge fund and private equity industries contribute €9 billion ($13.3 billion) in tax revenues to European Union (EU) governments.

Open Europe said that the €9 billion ($13.3 billion) tax contribution would be enough to fund the EU’s entire overseas aid budget for 12 years. The tax contribution also matches the value of the EU’s Cohesion and Aid Programmes for Poland and is just short of the subsidy that France receives each year under the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy.

The survey also found that the UK hedge fund and private equity industries contribute about €6.1 billion ($9 billion) in tax revenues to HMRC. Open Europe said this would be enough to pay for more than 200,000 nurses, 45,000 hospital consultants or 165,000 teachers. In just two years, the tax revenues generated by alternative investment fund managers would be able to pay for the entire 2012 London Olympics, according to Open Europe. But if the tax revenues were to disappear, Open Europe said it would take a 20% increase in council tax in order to make up the shortfall.

The European Commission’s Alternative Investment Fund Managers (AIFM) directive would cost the hedge fund and private equity industries in the EU between €1.3 billion and €1.9 billion ($1.9 billion and $2.8 billion) in its first year, if implemented in its current form. The annual recurring cost would be between €689 million and €985 million ($1 billion and $1.4 billion). Respondents said their total compliance costs would increase by almost one-third on average.

The report commented: “Our surveys show that unless a range of amendments take place, the AIFM directive will impose substantial costs across the board, without offering sufficient benefits for the industry, investors and the wider economy… In a worst-case scenario, thousands of jobs and millions in tax revenues could be at stake.”

Open Europe received 121 responses from hedge fund managers and fund of fund managers representing $342 billion assets under management. Just over half of the respondents came from managers located in the UK, while over one-fifth came from the rest of the EU and around one-quarter from the rest of the world. Open Europe also received 41 responses from private equity managers primarily based in the UK, representing funds under management of over $204 billion.